For Doctors

Bariatric surgery is now widely accepted as mainstream surgery for those who are at risk of complications from obesity.

In Australia, the number of bariatric surgeries performed has increased 40-fold since 1998, to approximately 17,500 surgeries annually in 2014. The procedures most commonly performed – gastric bypass and sleeve gastrectomy – also have greater long-term efficacy than previous popular operations. Patients are managed in reputable surgical centres by multidisciplinary teams involving sub-subspecialist surgeons, physicians, nurses, dietitians and psychologists to maximise long-term weight loss.

Evidence about the efficacy of bariatric surgery for co-morbidity resolution has also accumulated over the years.

Bariatric surgery has been shown to be particularly effective as a treatment for Type 2 Diabetes, sleep apnoea, infertility and highly effective at reducing cardiovascular risk.

Surgical technique has advanced significantly over the past 20 years, with bariatric surgeries now almost exclusively performed as laparoscopic operations with a lower morbidity profile than in the ‘open surgery’ era.

Referral to a surgical weight loss centre has been adopted in key management guidelines, which advise that:

Bariatric surgery is currently the most effective intervention for severe obesity.

In 2013, the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) published the Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Management of Overweight and Obesity in Adolescents, Children and Adults in Australia, which may be taken into account in future litigation cases.

Set a goal of at least 5% weight loss and review patients fortnightly for the first 3 months and continuing monitoring for at least 12 months. If there is less than 1% body weight reduction or no change in waist circumference after 3 months of active management, initiate additional interventions.

This sounds simple enough, but for many doctors it is not easy to initiate a conversation about weight issues with a patient. The major indemnity insurer, Avant, suggests that GPs fostering a trusting doctor-patient relationship is the key to successfully raising and managing this difficult issue in a sensitive manner. It is also recommended that weight, height, hip and waist measurements become a regular part of the consultation routine as a good way of initiating a conversation and making these discussions less uncomfortable.